© Kathy Duncan, 2026
My furthest back Holcomb ancestor is Nathaniel Holcomb, who first appears in the records of Ste Genevieve County, Missouri, in 1805 when he was named in a lawsuit. The problem is trying to track him backward out of Missouri.
All of Nathaniel's children except one seem to have been born in Missouri. His eldest daughter, Esther Holcomb, seems to have been born elsewhere, and that may be the key to discovering where Nathaniel had been before he came to Missouri.
The 1850 census of Jasper County, Missouri, provides the information that Esther (Holcomb) Jameson was born in Tennessee in about 1796. Even though Esther was the head of the household, there is no way to know if she provided that information or if it was provided by one of her children or a neighbor.
By 1880, only three of Esther's children were still living. In that year, her daughter Phoebe Caroline (Jameson) McNeill's census record stated that both of her parents had been born in Virginia. Her sister Margaret (Jameson) Pool's census record stated that her father was born in Kentucky and her mother in Missouri. The other living child, Jasper N. Jameson, has not been located in 1880.
By 1900, only Jasper N. Jameson was still living, but not found on the census. In 1920, Jasper's census record stated that his father was born in Virginia and his mother in Missouri.
That's a lot of conflicting information. My gut says to trust the census that was taken during Esther's lifetime, but I know from experience that it may not be reliable either. If Esther was born in Tennessee, then Nathaniel Holcomb and his wife were also in Tennessee.
Can a Nathaniel Holcomb be found in Tennessee in the 1790s? Tennessee was created from North Carolina in 1796, so that narrows down the window for a search. We know that Nathaniel Holcomb and family were in Missouri by about 1799 when Enoch Holcomb was born. Using Family Search's full-text search, a Nathaniel Holcomb can be found witnessing a deed in Tennessee in the 1790s. On 9 April 1796, Eli Strickland of "Tennessee County of the Territory of the United States" sold a piece of land to William Milcherson, who was also of "Tennessee County." Eli Strickland sold the land through a power of attorney with Nathaniel Holcomb as a witness to that power of attorney. The deed is located in the Montgomery County, Tennessee, records, but the land itself seems to have been next door in Robertson County. Prior to statehood, that region was known as "Tennessee County." After statehood, that area was divided into Montgomery and Robertson Counties. Eli Strickland had purchased his Tennessee land as early as 1793. That purchase is filed in Robertson County, Tennessee, but there is no mention of Nathaniel Holcomb in that earlier transaction
In theory, records for Tennessee County are kept in Robertson County, Tennessee. However, Eli Strickland's land sale, witnessed by Nathaniel Holcomb, is kept in Montgomery County, Tennessee, Record Book A, p. 1.
The Strickland name, of course, is part of Nathaniel Holcomb's FAN group. Titus Strickland of Ste. Genevieve County was the guardian of Nathaniel Holcomb's children after Nathaniel died. There was an Eli Strickland in Ste. Genevieve County during the time period that Nathaniel Holcomb was there. Was he the same Eli Strickland? Eli Strickland, like the Holcombs, was also in Plattin Twp. in Jefferson County, Missouri.
None of this is conclusive, but it is a clue. If the two Eli Stricklands could be proven to be the same person, then this would be stronger evidence that Nathaniel Holcomb was also in Tennessee County in the 1790s.












